USA Today bestselling author Vivienne
Lorret launches a new historical romance series featuring the Season’s
Original—a coveted title awarded by the ton’s elite to one lucky debutante...

From the Season Standard: ”A true Season’s
Original embodies the class, grace, and style of the ton. Such an honor
ensures the recipient their pick of eligible suitors…“

Lilah’s Appleton’s prospects are looking dim. With one last chance to find a
titled husband before she’s forced to wed her wretched cousin, she must make
this Season count. Plain, forgettable Lilah must become the Season’s Original.
Desperate, she seeks help from the devilishly charming, untitled, and
thoroughly unsuitable Jack Marlowe. All she must do now is resist the tempting
rogue…

Bastard son and self-made man, Jack Marlowe loathes the aristocracy. When he
meets Lilah, he expects her to be like all the other greedy husband-hunters.
But she’s far more dangerous. Her alluring smiles and sharp tongue intrigue
him. Before he knows it, he agrees to help her find a husband, revealing tricks
to ensnare any man. The only problem is, his plan works too well—on him.

When Lilah becomes the belle of the ball, Jack realizes he may lose her
forever-unless he can take a chance on love and claim his
debutante...

FIRST MEETING:

Once in her favorite spot beneath
the arbor, she drew in a deep breath and released it slowly. The air was
chilly, but there was no breeze to make her too cold without a shawl. Overhead,
clematis and rose vines were still brown and dormant. On the ground beside the stone
path at her feet, a myriad of crocuses bloomed gaily, while tulip shoots were
coming into their full height, hinting at their splendor. And halfway up,
between the white arbor post and the slatted wooden bench, a spider’s web
fanned out, its occupant hidden from view.

She was just leaning closer to study
it when she heard the door open and close with a quiet click. Assuming it was
Myrtle on an errand for Aunt Zinnia, Lilah didn’t bother to turn. “You may tell
my aunt that I will return shortly. I have need of a breath of air.”

“Do you breathe better when you’re
bent at the waist?” a man’s deep voice asked.

Startled, Lilah jerked upright,
whipping around to face the stranger.

Only he wasn’t quite a stranger. She’d seen him before. In
fact, not more than an hour ago. And he looked just as out of place in this
manicured garden as his Destrier had trotting along the London streets. She
imagined, however, that man and beast would look perfectly at home galloping
across an untamed moor or into battle. The man had a feral, warrior look about
him. Especially with the golden, hot-ember color of his eyes beneath the arch
of a tawny brow. And instead of walking with perfect pedestrian form, he prowled toward her—agile but controlled,
as if always prepared for battle.

Beneath a gray tailored coat, his
broad shoulders subtly rolled and shifted. The black buttons of his striped
waistcoat were in a flat, straight line, suggesting a firmness, about which she
likely shouldn’t ponder. The same way she should not admire the storm-cloud
gray shade of his riding breeches and the way they encased his thighs,
displaying every gradation of his impressive musculature.

When her gaze dipped, she also took
note of the large bouquet of pink and white primroses he carried, hanging carelessly
by his side. The flowers were enough to remind her of why she was out in the
garden. A fresh wave of disappointment hit her.

“I believe,” she said, but when her
words came out in nothing more than a whisper, she cleared her throat and began
again. “I believe you’ll find my cousin in the parlor.”

He stopped just beneath the arbor,
not two steps from her. As they had earlier, his lips curled into a smirk at
one corner of his mouth. This time, there was no mistaking the direction of his
gaze. He was, most assuredly, looking at her.
“When I asked where I would find Miss Lilah Appleton, a rather frantic maid
pointed in this direction. Was she mistaken?”

Lilah’s
breath caught in her throat. His voice was that of a warrior’s too—sure and
commanding but with an underlying edge. Do
not cross me, that tone warned as much as it promised. I will fight to the death for you. She could easily hear him saying
those words on a battlefield . . . or
in a ballroom. Of course, his attire
would be different for each occasion . . .

USA Today bestselling
author, VIVIENNE LORRET loves romance novels, her pink laptop,
her husband, and her two sons (not necessarily in that order … but there are
days). Transforming copious amounts of tea into words, she is an Avon Impulse
author of works including: Tempting Mr. Weatherstone, The Wallflower Wedding
Series, The Rakes of Fallow Hall Series, The Duke’s Christmas Wish, and the
Season’s Original Series.